
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
maraboutslim wrote:As an Irish American, I'm all for the Irish, but you have to admit that from a practical point of view, the students would be better off learning the language as it is spoken by Americans in the western usa since that is the country/economy with which they will, on average, have the most contact.
maraboutslim wrote:As an Irish American, I'm all for the Irish, but you have to admit that from a practical point of view, the students would be better off learning the language as it is spoken by Americans in the western usa since that is the country/economy with which they will, on average, have the most contact. I mean, would you want your Japanese teacher to teach you Kyushu-ben and the culture of Kyushu or the more useful standard Japanese as spoken in Tokyo?
But the advice to simply ignore the request is quite good. It's exactly what a Japanese teacher would do. So, when in Rome...
maraboutslim wrote:But natives of British English should remember that most Japanese travel to the states and conduct business with Americans and you'll be doing your students no favor if go teaching them that they ride up to the 10th floor in a lift or that they should ask their taxi driver to put their bags in the boot and ask the mechanic to check under the bonnet or ask the hotel concierge where they can buy some fags! And be sure to teach them what "freeze" means, when said by an American police officer.
maraboutslim wrote:So if the Japanese are going to know one word for tobacco, it's more appropriate for it to be cigarette than fag. If they travel to the UK, people still know what a cigarette is. If they travel to the states, "fag" just isn't going to get the job done.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests